Abd al-Hafid of Morocco
Abd al-Hafid ibn al-Hasan was the Sultan of Morocco from 1908 to 1912 and a member of the Alaouite Dynasty. His younger brother, Abdelaziz of Morocco, preceded him. While Abd al-Hafid initially opposed his brother, finally deposing him in a coup, for giving some concessions to foreign powers, he himself became increasingly backed by the French and finally signed the protectorate treaty giving de facto control of the country to France.
Early life
Abd al-Hafid ibn al-Hasan was born in Fez between 1875 and 1880 to Moulay Hassan I of Morocco and Aliya al-Settatiya, who was the daughter of the governor Salah ibn al-Ghazi and granddaughter of al-Ghazi ibn al-Madani, governor of Rabat, Chaouia and Tadla under Slimane of Morocco. She was from the rural gentry of the Arab confederation of Chaouia. He was the fourth son of Hassan.Before the Hafidiya, in 1897, he was appointed khalifa of Tiznit until 1901, where he was appointed khalifa of Marrakesh. Not much is known about the period of his life as khalifa of Tiznit.
While he was khalifa of Marrakesh, he became influenced by Ma al-Aynayn. He studied religious science under him receiving an ijaza from him in 1904.
Hafidiya
After his brother Abdelaziz appointed him as khalifa of Marrakesh, Abd al-Hafid sought to have him overthrown by fomenting distrust over Abdelaziz's European ties. Abd al-Hafid was aided by Madani al-Glaoui, older brother of T'hami, one of the Qaids of the Atlas. He was assisted in the training of his troops by Andrew Belton, a British officer and veteran of the Second Boer War. At this point, Abdelaziz was becoming less popular with the tribes weakening his rule over Morocco. When he attempted to send Ibn al-Ghazi to become pasha of Marrakesh after the murder of Émile Mauchamp, the tribes of the Haouz revolted with the Rahamna demanding Abd al-Hafid to become sultan. After the invasion of Chaouia, the tribes of Chaouia gathered and were led by Abu Azzawi who sent a letter to Abd al-Hafid calling him to "take action to restore Islam from the low estate into which it had fallen".In February 1908, Abd al-Hafid was proclaimed the Sultan of Fez. For a brief period, Abdelaziz reigned from Rabat while Abd al-Hafid reigned in Marrakesh and Fez. In August 1908 Abdelaziz was defeated in battle. In 1909, Abd al-Hafid became the recognized leader of Morocco.
Writing contemporaneously about his rule in 1909, George Frederick Andrews says that Abd al-Hafid "must play a very shrewd game. To maintain his authority over the tribes he must continue to appear decidedly anti-European in his feelings and his policy. On the other hand he must have money and the money must come from Europe. Also he knows that Morocco must submit to such reforms as have been decreed by the conference of the powers."
Reign
Political base
Abd al-Hafid preferred to rely on personal loyalties and ties of kin than the unstable and diverse coalition of supporters he built. His new makhzen was built up by big qaids. Madani al-Glaoui became Minister of War,, who was pasha of Safi and head of the Abda tribal confederation, became Minister of Foreign Affairs and became wazir al-shikayat.Foreign relations
After Abd al-Hafid took over, European countries still saw Abdelaziz as the legitimate sultan and the income from customs went to him. As long as he did not accept the controversial Act of Algericas, they refused to recognise his government depriving him from the customs revenue. During the Hafidiya, relations between Abd al-Hafid and the French deteriorated with the French seeing him as a bloodthirsty tyrant while seeing Abdelaziz as more legitimate. They assisted Abdelaziz with military advice and armament because they thought that Abdelaziz's weakness would make a French takeover easier while Abd al-Hafid could lead an effective jihad against European influence. Abd al-Hafid was faced with the dilemma of accommodating foreign pressure without alienating and losing his political base which he relied on for his survival. In order to appease the Europeans, Abd al-Hafid would have had to make compromises amounting to both a rejection of the Conditioned Bay'ah imposed on him and the principles of the Hafidiya.Abd al-Hafid sought diplomatic relations with European countries so he could receive the customs receipts that were piling up in the State Bank of Morocco. In September 1908, a German consul arrived in the capital of Morocco which led to a French response. The French sent Si Kaddour Benghabrit to Fez to put the French consular post office back in operation and he entered into contact with Abd al-Hafid discreetly leading to serious negotiations happening. The French government demanded that Abd al-Hafid accept the Act of Algericas and all other treaties and honour all Moroccan debts. Abd al-Hafid, with the assistance of, sent a letter to the powers promising to accept the Act of Algericas, honour the debts of his predecessors and pay for the indemnities and the cost of the French campaign in Oujda and Chaouia. One of the initial demands of the French was for Abd al-Hafid to renounce the jihad in a letter to be read in every mosque of Morocco but the British and the German governments managed to tone this demand down knowing the danger it would have posed to the stability of Abd al-Hafid's rule.
On September 14, the French and Spanish governments announced their provisional recognition of Abd al-Hafid's government and this was circulated among the powers for government and approval. On the 5 January 1909, the new government was officially recognised allowing for normalisation of relations between Morocco and the powers and granting Abd al-Hafid access to the 12 million francs in the state bank. The French military mission to Fez also returned the same month. The negotiations that came after this centred on Morocco's attempts to have the clauses of the Act of Algericas modified or have the act abolished altogether. This French mission was joined by a Spanish one but negotiations with Spain went poorly as Abd al-Hafid refused any concession of Spain over Ceuta and Melilla until combined pressure from Spain and France forced Abd al-Hafid to relent. Because of the need for finances and Abd al-Hafid's weak domestic position, a Moroccan diplomat mission was sent to Paris consisting of the minister of finances, Muhammad al-Muqri, the minister of foreign affairs, Abdallah al-Fasi, and two other makhzen officials. France made further demands like calling for the makhzen to sever all connections with Ma al-'Aynayn.
After the defeat of Bou Hmara, Abd al-Hafid's rule in central Morocco became much more stable allowing for his approach to France to become bolder. He became increasingly more anti-French which appeased militants in Fez. He sought relations with powers like Germany, Italy and the Ottoman Empire. Abd al-Hafid was most successful with the Ottoman Empire which was run by the Young Turks who adopted a policy of supporting other Muslims outside the Ottoman Empire who resisted the West. Abd al-Hafid similarly had pan-Islamist beliefs. One of the demands of the supporters of the Hafidiya was for closer relations with the rest of the Muslim world. In 1909, the Young Turk government sent a 12-man military mission to Morocco. This mission was attached to the makhzen army as advisors and accompanied the troops in manoeuvrers against dissident tribes north of Fez. It was commanded by Captain Arif Bey and was made up of Turkish, Syrian and Egyptian officers. While the mission was there, they founded the pan-Islamist youth organisation "Young Maghreb" which also had members in other North African countries like Egypt and Algeria. Other pan-Islamist organisations emerged during this time with one, al-Itiihad al-Maghrebi, planning riots against the French. The Turkish military mission was forced to leave in March 1910 because of French diplomatic pressure.
Despotism
Mawlay Mahammad, the brother of Abd al-Hafid, attempted to become sultan with the support of the Zaër in 1908. He was quickly recaptured and paraded in rags in the city of Fez before disappearing. He did survive this, but his secretary died after being publicly tortured with his head shaved, beard plucked and hands disabled by salt torture. Muhammad al-Kattani, the influential Sufi poet and anti-French activist from Fez, was captured, tortured, and beaten to death in front of his wives and children in 1909. Abd al-Hafid's opposition to al-Kattani was not only because of their dispute over resisting the West but due to Abd al-Hafid's Salafist beliefs. The tribe who gave protection to al-Kattani were punished brutally by Abd al-Hafid. Initially, he demanded an indemnity of 100,000 douros. After they refused and were defeated in battle, they were given even harsher terms including the payment of the fine, acceptance of qaids appointed by the makhzen and a supply of 300 men to serve in the Sharifian army marking the first time a Middle Atlas tribe was forced to supply men to the Sharifian army. In 1909, when he captured Bou Hmara, Abd al-Hafid fed Bou Hmara to his lions. Punishments like mutilation were applied to his servants.In May 1910, the pasha of Meknes and governor of Fez, Hajj Ibn Aissa ibn Hammu, and his family were arrested. He was accused of supporting Abdelaziz and inciting the Zemmour tribe to rebel. The wife of Ibn Aissa, Lalla Batoul, a Fesi aristocrat and supporter of Abdelaziz, was tortured. She was chained to the wall in a crucifixion position, completely naked with her breasts seized in a vice, and whipped and interrogated about the whereabouts of her husband's fortune under the direct supervision of Abd al-Hafid. She had a network of connections with Europeans living in Morocco allowing the news of her torture to spread widely in the international press. This allowed her to eventually be released even though her husband was not. For example, Walter Burton Harris reported on the incident in an article published in the Times of Morocco:
The Ibn Aissa affair alongside the punishment against Bou Hmara and his servants and al-Kattani alienated the tribes around Fez and the community of Fez. This repression was also ineffective as rural opposition still persisted and both the French and Spanish armies occupied more territory in Morocco.
These punishments appalled humanitarians in Europe but Abd al-Hafid dismissed them as he saw these punishments as not just a way of punishing his enemies but also as proof of his sovereign power. The Ibn Aissa affair in particular alarmed the European community in Morocco and they saw it as proof of their perception of Abd al-Hafid as a tyrant. Because of the pressure, Abd al-Hafid freed members of Ibn Aissa's family but despite this, the affair justified increased French intervention in Morocco.